Ostfriesland and Central Illinois
Mar. 9th, 2008 09:26 pmI grew up in the Chicago suburbs, went to high school in what was at the time the western edge of suburbia, with farms nearby, and went to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in the very flat middle part of the state. I spent lots of time cycling around in the corn fields, where the roads passing over the highways were the highest ground around, offering what passes in the region for great views.
Northwestern Germany is similarly flat, though also rather closer to sea level, not to mention rather closer to the sea. Still, I was very much struck by the visual similarity, at least in some respects.
It was actually the first thing I felt on the drive to Emden. Flat, green, cows, corn—just like my old home. Just like my old home except for the sturdy masonry buildings, the road signs in German, and the fact that we were going 170 km/hr, that is.
Giant wind turbines everywhere I looked was also a striking difference, but if you ignore those, this looks just like Champaign, Illinois:

This very narrow road looks a bit like something I might have ridden a bicycle down years ago:

It's true that central Illinois is very much lacking in these:

Standing up on the berm beside the water, though, felt like standing up atop the highway overpass, the only high ground around.
Greetsiel may be just painfully lovely in a very non-Illinois-like way, but you could practically convince yourself that you were on the way to Homer Illinois while driving along a road like this:

Northwestern Germany is similarly flat, though also rather closer to sea level, not to mention rather closer to the sea. Still, I was very much struck by the visual similarity, at least in some respects.
It was actually the first thing I felt on the drive to Emden. Flat, green, cows, corn—just like my old home. Just like my old home except for the sturdy masonry buildings, the road signs in German, and the fact that we were going 170 km/hr, that is.
Giant wind turbines everywhere I looked was also a striking difference, but if you ignore those, this looks just like Champaign, Illinois:

This very narrow road looks a bit like something I might have ridden a bicycle down years ago:

It's true that central Illinois is very much lacking in these:

Standing up on the berm beside the water, though, felt like standing up atop the highway overpass, the only high ground around.
Greetsiel may be just painfully lovely in a very non-Illinois-like way, but you could practically convince yourself that you were on the way to Homer Illinois while driving along a road like this:

no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 08:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 12:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 02:51 pm (UTC)I get nostalgic. I was born up north and the flat land, the lighthouse, it's all like *home* to me *sighs*. Not the energy windmill, though. They didn't exist back then and they are fairly ugly.
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Date: 2008-03-10 04:37 pm (UTC)Wind turbines... Germany is famous for the super-insulated houses (we sometimes use the term Passivhaus in English) and the tiny Diesel cars (which you nonetheless drive really fast) and the wind turbines. I knew there were a lot of them, but, wow, there really are a lot of them. Much as I appreciate bucket wheel excavators at lignite mines (http://beige-alert.livejournal.com/165723.html), I think the wind turbines are a lot prettier than a strip mine.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 06:12 pm (UTC)Germany is the country of high oil prices. Since people used to heat houses with oil (our house still does) we have a history for insulation. We use around 3000 liters of oil per year for heating and hot water. I hate to burn all that CO2 and valuable raw material, but what can I do? I can't very well install a wind turbine in the back yard :-)
no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 06:23 pm (UTC)